Publications by authors named "Fassetta M"

AP-2 proteins are a family of developmentally-regulated transcription factors. They are encoded by five different genes (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon) but they share a common structure. AP-2 plays relevant roles in growth, differentiation, and adhesion by controlling the transcription of specific genes.

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Overexpressed or activated hepatocyte growth factor receptor, encoded by the MET proto-oncogene, was found in the majority of colorectal carcinomas (CRCs), whose stepwise progression to malignancy requires transcriptional activation of beta-catenin. We here demonstrate that a functional crosstalk between Met and beta-catenin signaling sustains and increases CRC cell invasive properties. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) stimulation prompts beta-catenin tyrosine phosphorylation and dissociation from Met, and upregulates beta-catenin expression via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway in conditions that mimic those found by the invading and metastasizing cells.

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Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induces invasive growth, a biological program that confers tumor cells the capability to invade and metastasize by integrating cell proliferation, motility, morphogenesis, and survival. We here demonstrate that HGFR activation promotes survival of colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells exposed to conditions that mimic those met during tumor progression, i.e.

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We recently showed that Hepatocyte Growth Factor (HGF), known as a survival factor, unexpectedly enhances apoptosis in human ovarian cancer cells treated with the front-line chemotherapeutics cisplatin (CDDP) and paclitaxel (PTX). Here we demonstrate that this effect depends on the p38 mitogen-activated kinase (MAPK). In fact, p38 MAPK activity is stimulated by HGF and further increased by the combined treatment with HGF and either CDDP or PTX.

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Human T-lymphoma Jurkat cells treated with several intrinsic death stimuli readily undergo a stepwise apoptotic program. Treatment with 1,9-dideoxyforskolin (ddFSK), an inactive analogue of the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin, induces necrotic cell death and switches to necrosis the response to the apoptosis inducers in Jurkat and in other cell models. Yet, in the presence of ddFSK, mitochondrial changes are enhanced and apoptosome formation takes place.

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